- Dec 26, 2006
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I have a friend asking questions about the Office of the Keys. So that I don't stray (through ignorance) too far in my explanations, I'd like to reproduce the conversations here.
Please let me preface this with an explanation; I haven't taken communion in several years. This is due to being unable to attend an LCMS church. The cost of travelling to Redding is just too much for me on my own and I'm rarely able to get there Sundays for church. On the rare occasion I've made it, they have'nt been serving. I mentioned this to my friend and she was concerned and began to ask questions:
I responded:
If I have erred in my responses, I would greatly appreciate it if one of the pastors here would be so kind as to correct me. I am after all, just an ignorant layman.
As to Gail, he was an Ordained Minister of the Pentacostal Church. He has gone to be with the Lord, lucky fellow.
His wife, a dear friend of mine, is the one I'm speaking to in these messages. She was a Missionary's daughter and performed missionary work herself. Later, after she and Gail had been married, they returned for a few years and took over her father's mission after he had died. She may not be a Lutheran, but the woman practices what she preaches in a way I've rarely seen in any church.
Please let me preface this with an explanation; I haven't taken communion in several years. This is due to being unable to attend an LCMS church. The cost of travelling to Redding is just too much for me on my own and I'm rarely able to get there Sundays for church. On the rare occasion I've made it, they have'nt been serving. I mentioned this to my friend and she was concerned and began to ask questions:
Another thing I have been thinking of is the Communion. I know the Lutherans do things differently for their reasons. When Gail and I were not able to have Communion at the church, we would do it at home or with leadership who would be in our home. Gail, being the head and priest of our home would do communion with me when we felt we needed to do so. What is your take on this? Have you ever done this for yourself? Or could you and I do it together? I do not know how the Lutheran's feel about this when a person cannot have the communion in the Church he or she belong to as in your case. I have no objection to it and have none if wine is used as well.
I responded:
In the Lutheran church, the Sacrament of Communion falls into the Office of the keys. This office is the perview of an ordained Minister of the Word only. IE: if one's pastor is not available, a congregation goes without till one is. I suppose it would be possible for me to contact the Pastor at the Lutheran church in Redding and request communion. He can do so at any time. There's a process involved that requires Pastoral care, and a statement of faith first, still it would be possible.
You have talked about the office of the Keys before. What exactly is it and why do you have it and it is not mentioned in the Bible as far as I know. Also, I am a true believer and am committed to the Lord. Do you recognize that? Or, since I am not a Lutheran, does that mean I am not in your eyes or your churches belief?
Do you have a book on Lutheran teaching? I am sure you have a set of doctrines you adhere to and are required by the members of your church.
Ah, that e-mail message... Office Of The Keys are the functions of the Church reserved for the Clergy only. For instance, Communion, Baptism, Marriage, Counseling, etc... The book you are looking for is the Book of Concord. As they're expensive, I don't have one. However, I can ask one of the posters on the Lutheran forum.
As to this: " Also, I am a true believer and am committed to the Lord. Do you recognize that? Or, since I am not a Lutheran, does that mean I am not in your eyes or your churches belief?" The only answer I can give is that Luther once said he didn't have all the answers. Yours is recognized as a valid Christian belief. However, yours is an incorrect practice, according to our church's belief. Otherwise, the Lutheran church would cease to exist. After all, if yours is a correct practice, we (Lutherans) would be obligated to join your congregation.
As to the term, "Office of the Keys," no, the term isn't Biblical. Neither is the term, "Trinity," in referrence to the 'Triune' God. They fall under the term adiaphora, or Church tradition. These terms are a shorthand used to describe a Biblical concept. Some of this (Office of the Keys) also is a way of the Church to avoid the excessess that were described in I & II Cor. They date back to the first century. Like the current Sacrament of Communion. Far back before the Roman Catholic or even Eastern Orthidox, or even any really organized Christian church.
Gail was ordained as a minister and I was his wife, and trained in the Bible and well equiped in ministry as well. Does that count at all that Gail could do communion? And he preached, taught Bible classes and baptized people. I was his right hand.
Yes, as Gail was an Ordained Minister, he had the Office of the Keys. He could sanctify the elements (the key) and administer the sacrament. You could administer the elements, if he had already blessed them, to him. Otherwise, an Ordained Minister could never take Communion. The operative working here is that the Officer of the Keys was presiding over the Sacrament. However, and this is very important, had Gail not been Ordained as a Minister, there would have been a problem. As Gail was Ordained into the service of the Lord, his actions were sanctified in a way that an ordinary man's wouldn't be. He was one of the sheep chosen to lead the flock. A sort of deputy of the Shepherd (Christ). The fact that he wasn't in charge of a congregation was beside the point. Gail was used in other ways.
Does any of this make sense? I hope it helped.
If I have erred in my responses, I would greatly appreciate it if one of the pastors here would be so kind as to correct me. I am after all, just an ignorant layman.
As to Gail, he was an Ordained Minister of the Pentacostal Church. He has gone to be with the Lord, lucky fellow.
